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ID174256
Title ProperResponding to Precarity
Other Title InformationBeddawi Camp in the Era of Covid-19
LanguageENG
AuthorFiddian-Qasmiyeh, Elena
Summary / Abstract (Note)How are refugees responding to protect themselves and others in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic? How do these responses relate to diverse local, national, and international structures of inequality and marginalization? Drawing on the case of Beddawi camp in North Lebanon, I argue that local responses—such as sharing information via print and social media, raising funds for and preparing iftar baskets during Ramadan, and distributing food and sanitation products to help people practice social distancing—demonstrate how camp residents have worked individually and collectively to find ways to care for Palestinian, Syrian, Iraqi, Kurdish, and Lebanese residents alike, thereby transcending a focus on nationality-based identity markers. However, state, municipal, international, and media reports pointing to Syrian refugees as having imported the virus into Beddawi camp place such local modes of solidarity and mutuality at risk. This article thus highlights the importance of considering how refugee-refugee assistance initiatives relate simultaneously to: the politics of the self and the other, politically produced precarity, and multi-scalar systems that undermine the potential for solidarity in times of overlapping
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Palestine Studies Vol. 49, No.4; Summer 2020: p. 27–35.
Journal SourceJournal of Palestine Studies 2020-09 49, 4
Key WordsMutual Aid ;  Ramadan ;  Palestinian Refugee ;  COVID-19 ;  Beddawi Camp ;  Syrian Refugee